Only the patterning board will tell the story. I have two 16 gauges. One patterns better with 1 oz loads and the other patterns better with 1 1/4 oz loads so no, more shot does not always equal denser patterns. It depends on the gun.
Excellent point! CANNOT emphasize what DoubleBass is saying, enough! Every gun (or barrel) is an "individual." They are NOT THE SAME - one barrel to the next! Also MacWoodie, great comments and skinny on shoot #7 - size shot! Never tried that size myself, although I have shot plenty of #6's and #7 1/2's.
For those that care about this size of pellet ......
Is is .10" inches in diameter, versus .095" for #7 1/2's, and .11" for number 6's.
And where there are @350 pellets in ONE ounce of 7 1/2's, and @225 pellets in ONE ounce of sixes,
there are @299 pellets in ONE ounce of #7 (.10" diam.) shot.
Originally this post started asking about 1-ounce 20 gauge loads (2 3/4") versus 1-1/4oz loads in 3" 20ga shells.
I reload, and if I was making 3inch 20 gauge shells, I would look seriously at
loading only 1-1/8 ounces in a 3inch 20 gauge shell! And no more! By limiting myself to 1 1/8 ounces in a 3inch 20ga shell I can keep velocities higher where I like them to be (@1220-@1250fps for bird-killing loads),
but also still have ample room for a good wad column as well! In addition, I would tweek the shot-size to fit the density-of-pattern I needed to kill whatever I was hunting. I rarely have need for anything bigger than a #5 pellet, usually at tough pheasants from a 12 or 20 gauge.
Pheasants sometimes weigh 3 pounds or so
, but most upland birds never weigh more than 2 pounds! So what I've learned is that
#7 1/2's and #6's will kill 90-plus percent of what I might hunt.
I think
#7's might be a great compromise between those two shot sizes
, when that size of lead pellet is available! THAT is the rub! Plus 1-1/8 ounces of #7's in a 3inch 20ga shell will still give the hunter
@337 pellets in a really hard-hitting pattern! Capable of being loaded to 1300fps
(Hodgdon data).